"The election shocked me" says the legendary director and comedian, though he's optimistic the country will get through these four years more or less intact.
Subscribe To "The Late Show" Channel HERE: http://bit.ly/ColbertYouTube
For more content from "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert", click HERE: http://bit.ly/1AKISnR
Watch full episodes of "The Late Show" HERE: http://bit.ly/1Puei40
Like "The Late Show" on Facebook HERE: http://on.fb.me/1df139Y
Follow "The Late Show" on Twitter HERE: http://bit.ly/1dMzZzG
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Follow "The Late Show" on Tumblr HERE: http://bit.ly/29DVvtR
Watch The Late Show with Stephen Colbert weeknights at 11:35 PM ET/10:35 PM CT. Only on CBS.
Get the CBS app for iPhone & iPad! Click HERE: http://bit.ly/12rLxge
Get new episodes of shows you love across devices the next day, stream live TV, and watch full seasons of CBS fan favorites anytime, anywhere with CBS All Access. Try it free! http://bit.ly/1OQA29B
---
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert is the premier late night talk show on CBS, airing at 11:35pm EST, streaming online via CBS All Access, and delivered to the International Space Station on a USB drive taped to a weather balloon. Every night, viewers can expect: Comedy, humor, funny moments, witty interviews, celebrities, famous people, movie stars, bits, humorous celebrities doing bits, funny celebs, big group photos of every star from Hollywood, even the reclusive ones, plus also jokes.

published:23 Nov 2016

views:231332

Go inside the home and mind of John Waters as we take a closer look inside his Baltimore home before we kick off a week of his controversial films in JOHNWATERS PRESENTS: FILMS OF BAD TASTE on Monday August 11 at 9.30pm.

Writer-director John Waters explains to BFI programmer Justin Johnson why he is a fan of Trog (1970), the much derided sci-fi film starring Joan Crawford. Waters interviews Joe Cornelius, who plays Trog, who recalls what it was like working with Crawford and gives his verdict on seeing the film again after 45 years.
Subscribe: http://bit.ly/subscribetotheBFI.
More from John Waters & the BFI: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXvkgGofjDzhxPA01PTd8m9Kyv8nmTqOx
Watch more on the BFI Player: http://player.bfi.org.uk/
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/BFI
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BritishFilmInstitute
Follow us on Google+: https://plus.google.com/+britishfilminstitute/

The life and times of Baltimore film maker and midnight movie pioneer, John Waters. Intercut with a 1972 interview of Waters are clips from his first films and recent interviews with his parents, his brother, Divine's mom, actors and crew, other directors, film critics, a film curator, psychologists, and Maryland's last censor, who shudders at the memory of Waters's pictures. Also included is footage of Waters making his early movies, culminating in an up-close and in-depth look at Pink Flamingos: the script, the set, the filming conditions, its editing, its distribution, and its impact. In sweet ways, this documentary is also a celebration of Divine (1945-1988).

published:07 Dec 2016

views:60136

http://bigthink.com
John Waters knew he was gay the moment he saw Elvis Presley, but people rarely asked him about his sexuality because they feared it was something "worse" than homosexuality. "They were afraid to hear the answer," he says.
Question: How did you come out?John Waters: Coming out! It's just so square to me. I mean, I always was gay. I knew I was gay the moment I saw Elvis Presley, when I was probably about 10 years old. I thought, what the hell is that? But I know it's important to some people, but I just... no one, I never just came out and made it a ceremony or an announcement. Like when people say, "Are you a bottom or a top?" What is it, a political party? It depends. It's amazing to me the seriousness with these questions we're asked about. To me, most of the gay people I know sort of just always were, but they didn't only hang around with gay people, they hung around with straight people that... I'm for mix. I'm against separatism of any kind. I don't like men that call women fish and I hate that. I hate separate lesbians that hate men. I like them better though. But I know it's important to people. No one ever asked me if I was gay because they thought something was worse than that. They were afraid to hear the answer. I was on the cover of the Advocate and it said, "The World's Most Out Director," but they never asked me if I was gay. They never asked me a gay question. I was waiting. And my father once said, "Do you have to say it in USA Today?" so I didn't. I thought that was fair, you know. He doesn't care if I'm on the cover of Out because his friends don't see that. So I thought it was a funny question. I honored that, sure. USA Today would never ask you that question anyway. So I'm for it, but I kind of just always felt like I always was. I mean, I was on the cover of a gay magazine in like 1972, something called GayTimes and it wasn't because I was brave, just nobody else wanted to put me on the cover. Really. So, and my films have... I've always said that my audiences, even gay people that don't get along with other gay people, black people that don't get along with other black people. Minorities that can't stand even the rules of their own minority. And I'm one of them. Too much gaily correctness makes me crazy too. You now, that GlAAD came out against this tranny movie? Oh please, we have more enemies than that. It was like, what, are gay people losing their sense of humor they have to be perfect now? I'm for gay villains. I think it's healthy to admit there's bad gay movies. Gay's not enough, it's a good start. Question: As gay culture has entered the mainstream has it become more homogeneous?John Waters: I think, yeah. I don't understand what gay people want to be like everybody else. To me, we were outlaws, we used our wit for fighting words, you know, act up, act bad I wanted. But I understand that people... straight, gay, people want to get married, they want to have children. I'm for that, I'm all for that. I'm for like, why would anyone be against gay adoption? I can't understand it, or when celebrities get babies. Madonna's child won the lottery, if you ask me. The one she just got in Africa. I'm for anybody getting any kid, if they can love it. And I'm for abortion. If you can't love your kid, don't have it because it will grow up and kill us.
Recorded September 10, 2010 Interviewed by Max Miller

published:14 Jun 2011

views:155540

The inimitable John Waters reading from his book 'Shock Value' -- this is the first of two parts.
The below link goes to John Waters' Amazon page:
http://www.amazon.com/John-Waters/e/B000APM1ES/ref=sr_tc_2_0?qid=1402569014&sr=1-2-ent

Subscribe: http://bit.ly/subscribetotheBFI.
AuteurJohn Waters joins season curator Justin Johnson to talk about his film career. Moved by the fact that his work attracts younger viewers as his career progresses, Waters pays tribute to like-minded friends he has used as actors and discusses the inspiration behind his vibrant creativity.
More from John Waters & the BFI: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXvkgGofjDzhxPA01PTd8m9Kyv8nmTqOx
Watch more on the BFI Player: http://player.bfi.org.uk/
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/BFI
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BritishFilmInstitute
Follow us on Google+: https://plus.google.com/+britishfilminstitute/

What Does It Take To Shock John Waters?

"The election shocked me" says the legendary director and comedian, though he's optimistic the country will get through these four years more or less intact.
Subscribe To "The Late Show" Channel HERE: http://bit.ly/ColbertYouTube
For more content from "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert", click HERE: http://bit.ly/1AKISnR
Watch full episodes of "The Late Show" HERE: http://bit.ly/1Puei40
Like "The Late Show" on Facebook HERE: http://on.fb.me/1df139Y
Follow "The Late Show" on Twitter HERE: http://bit.ly/1dMzZzG
Follow "The Late Show" on Google+ HERE: http://bit.ly/1JlGgzw
Follow "The Late Show" on Instagram HERE: http://bit.ly/29wfREj
Follow "The Late Show" on Tumblr HERE: http://bit.ly/29DVvtR
Watch The Late Show with Stephen Colbert weeknights at 11:35 PM ET/10:35 PM CT. Only on CBS.
Get the CBS app for iPhone & iPad! Click HERE: http://bit.ly/12rLxge
Get new episodes of shows you love across devices the next day, stream live TV, and watch full seasons of CBS fan favorites anytime, anywhere with CBS All Access. Try it free! http://bit.ly/1OQA29B
---
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert is the premier late night talk show on CBS, airing at 11:35pm EST, streaming online via CBS All Access, and delivered to the International Space Station on a USB drive taped to a weather balloon. Every night, viewers can expect: Comedy, humor, funny moments, witty interviews, celebrities, famous people, movie stars, bits, humorous celebrities doing bits, funny celebs, big group photos of every star from Hollywood, even the reclusive ones, plus also jokes.

7:41

John Waters: Behind the Pencil Moustache

John Waters: Behind the Pencil Moustache

John Waters: Behind the Pencil Moustache

Go inside the home and mind of John Waters as we take a closer look inside his Baltimore home before we kick off a week of his controversial films in JOHNWATERS PRESENTS: FILMS OF BAD TASTE on Monday August 11 at 9.30pm.

John Waters introduces Trog | BFI

Writer-director John Waters explains to BFI programmer Justin Johnson why he is a fan of Trog (1970), the much derided sci-fi film starring Joan Crawford. Waters interviews Joe Cornelius, who plays Trog, who recalls what it was like working with Crawford and gives his verdict on seeing the film again after 45 years.
Subscribe: http://bit.ly/subscribetotheBFI.
More from John Waters & the BFI: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXvkgGofjDzhxPA01PTd8m9Kyv8nmTqOx
Watch more on the BFI Player: http://player.bfi.org.uk/
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/BFI
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BritishFilmInstitute
Follow us on Google+: https://plus.google.com/+britishfilminstitute/

Divine Trash Documentary 1998

The life and times of Baltimore film maker and midnight movie pioneer, John Waters. Intercut with a 1972 interview of Waters are clips from his first films and recent interviews with his parents, his brother, Divine's mom, actors and crew, other directors, film critics, a film curator, psychologists, and Maryland's last censor, who shudders at the memory of Waters's pictures. Also included is footage of Waters making his early movies, culminating in an up-close and in-depth look at Pink Flamingos: the script, the set, the filming conditions, its editing, its distribution, and its impact. In sweet ways, this documentary is also a celebration of Divine (1945-1988).

3:03

John Waters: Coming Out Is So Square

John Waters: Coming Out Is So Square

John Waters: Coming Out Is So Square

http://bigthink.com
John Waters knew he was gay the moment he saw Elvis Presley, but people rarely asked him about his sexuality because they feared it was something "worse" than homosexuality. "They were afraid to hear the answer," he says.
Question: How did you come out?John Waters: Coming out! It's just so square to me. I mean, I always was gay. I knew I was gay the moment I saw Elvis Presley, when I was probably about 10 years old. I thought, what the hell is that? But I know it's important to some people, but I just... no one, I never just came out and made it a ceremony or an announcement. Like when people say, "Are you a bottom or a top?" What is it, a political party? It depends. It's amazing to me the seriousness with these questions we're asked about. To me, most of the gay people I know sort of just always were, but they didn't only hang around with gay people, they hung around with straight people that... I'm for mix. I'm against separatism of any kind. I don't like men that call women fish and I hate that. I hate separate lesbians that hate men. I like them better though. But I know it's important to people. No one ever asked me if I was gay because they thought something was worse than that. They were afraid to hear the answer. I was on the cover of the Advocate and it said, "The World's Most Out Director," but they never asked me if I was gay. They never asked me a gay question. I was waiting. And my father once said, "Do you have to say it in USA Today?" so I didn't. I thought that was fair, you know. He doesn't care if I'm on the cover of Out because his friends don't see that. So I thought it was a funny question. I honored that, sure. USA Today would never ask you that question anyway. So I'm for it, but I kind of just always felt like I always was. I mean, I was on the cover of a gay magazine in like 1972, something called GayTimes and it wasn't because I was brave, just nobody else wanted to put me on the cover. Really. So, and my films have... I've always said that my audiences, even gay people that don't get along with other gay people, black people that don't get along with other black people. Minorities that can't stand even the rules of their own minority. And I'm one of them. Too much gaily correctness makes me crazy too. You now, that GlAAD came out against this tranny movie? Oh please, we have more enemies than that. It was like, what, are gay people losing their sense of humor they have to be perfect now? I'm for gay villains. I think it's healthy to admit there's bad gay movies. Gay's not enough, it's a good start. Question: As gay culture has entered the mainstream has it become more homogeneous?John Waters: I think, yeah. I don't understand what gay people want to be like everybody else. To me, we were outlaws, we used our wit for fighting words, you know, act up, act bad I wanted. But I understand that people... straight, gay, people want to get married, they want to have children. I'm for that, I'm all for that. I'm for like, why would anyone be against gay adoption? I can't understand it, or when celebrities get babies. Madonna's child won the lottery, if you ask me. The one she just got in Africa. I'm for anybody getting any kid, if they can love it. And I'm for abortion. If you can't love your kid, don't have it because it will grow up and kill us.
Recorded September 10, 2010 Interviewed by Max Miller

42:03

John Waters reads from 'Shock Value' (part 1 of 2)

John Waters reads from 'Shock Value' (part 1 of 2)

John Waters reads from 'Shock Value' (part 1 of 2)

The inimitable John Waters reading from his book 'Shock Value' -- this is the first of two parts.
The below link goes to John Waters' Amazon page:
http://www.amazon.com/John-Waters/e/B000APM1ES/ref=sr_tc_2_0?qid=1402569014&sr=1-2-ent

Director John Waters With Jay Leno 2000

John Waters: on stage with the ‘Pope of Trash’ (Extended) | BFI

Subscribe: http://bit.ly/subscribetotheBFI.
AuteurJohn Waters joins season curator Justin Johnson to talk about his film career. Moved by the fact that his work attracts younger viewers as his career progresses, Waters pays tribute to like-minded friends he has used as actors and discusses the inspiration behind his vibrant creativity.
More from John Waters & the BFI: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXvkgGofjDzhxPA01PTd8m9Kyv8nmTqOx
Watch more on the BFI Player: http://player.bfi.org.uk/
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/BFI
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BritishFilmInstitute
Follow us on Google+: https://plus.google.com/+britishfilminstitute/

21:33

Movies That Shook the World: Pink Flamingos

Movies That Shook the World: Pink Flamingos

Movies That Shook the World: Pink Flamingos

Part of a nine-part series examining the impact on society of controversial films includes remarks by critics, actors, directors, producers and scholars, who comment on the content and context of films.
Pink Flamingos is a 1972American transgressive comedy film directed by John Waters. When the film was initially released, it caused a huge degree of controversy and thus became one of the most notorious cult films ever made. It made an underground star of the flamboyant female impersonator, Divine. The film also stars David Lochary, Mary Vivian Pearce, Mink Stole, Danny Mills, Cookie Mueller, and Edith Massey. Produced on a budget of only $10,000, it was mostly shot on weekends in Phoenix, a suburb of Baltimore, Maryland. After screenings at universities across the U.S. including Harvard College in 1973, the film was picked up by New Line Cinema and became a nationally known film. The creator, cast, crew and commentators discuss the effect the film has had in world culture.

Plot: Three friends - a reporter, an oil analyst and a financial executive - reunite after ten years and accidentally uncover one of the key, hidden reasons for what motivated the war in Iraq. The trio struggles to present evidence to major media that America invaded Iraq to force oil sales from the Euro back to the Dollar to preserve US global monetary supremacy. Against incredible odds, the team must face their pasts, find willing sources to corroborate the story, and survive the conspirators as they push to bring the truth to light.

Plot: This film, inspired by actual events, tells the story of the defense of the island of Malta during WWII. Malta, part of the British Commonwealth, is actually a small group of islands in the Mediterranean Sea, about half way between Sicily and the northern coast of Africa. On June 12, 1940, the day after Italy declared war on Britain, the Italians began a prolonged campaign of aerial bombardments against Malta. This film highlights the early phase of that conflict as it follows the lives of three RAF pilots: George Burges, John Waters and Timber Woods. These pilots flew Gloster Sea Gladiator biplanes in the heroic defense of the island against more modern Italian fighters and bombers. In all, about six Gladiators were involved in the fighting--some were cannibalized for parts--but only three could ever be scrambled for a single sortie. The legend that arose from that conflict immortalized three of the Gladiators, nicknamed Faith, Hope and Charity.

Plot: This film covers the latter years of Canada's naval contribution to World War II. In particular, this film focuses on the troubles of the atlantic transportation route that was one of the most hazardous in the war. Of that route, no part was more dangerous than the region that naval command refused to have patrolled by long range aircraft, nicknamed the Black Pit. Thanks to this act of incompetence, Canadian naval forces were besieged by U-Boats while in this large area of the Atlantic until events force a needed change.

Plot: This film covers the Canadian contribution to the war effort at sea during World War II. In the early days, Canada plays a vital role to supply Britain with sea deliveries. However, the job is made all the more difficult with incompetent command, inadequate equipment and training and the fact that the German U-Boats are boldly striking with impunity, even in the St. Lawrence seaway itself!

Famous quotes by John Waters:

"He's also someone who men and women are instantly fond of , ... He's the cutest, funniest boy that you would meet in real life. He can certainly act but he's a real person, someone that every time you know you're going to have fun when you go out with him."

"Isn't that the most perverse thing you've ever heard?"

"The ultimate irony is that I'm becoming part of the establishment,"

"Now it's on Court TV in America, so that's taken the challenge out of it,"

"I totally neutered it for Wal-Mart and Blockbuster, I made a baby version of my film,"

"Without obsession, life is nothing."

"I'd love to sell out completely. It's just that nobody has been willing to buy."

"To me, bad taste is what entertainment is all about"

"I also hate those holidays that fall on a Monday where you don't get mail, those fake holidays like Columbus Day. What did Christopher Columbus do, discover America? If he hadn't, somebody else would have and we'd still be here. Big deal."

"I thank God I was raised Catholic, so sex will always be dirty."

"I wish something on T.V. would trouble me. Then maybe I would watch it."

"I'm thrilled to have a completely new audience that I can get from Court TV, without it being my own trial. That was the only other way I would have gotten it."

What Does It Take To Shock John Waters?

"The election shocked me" says the legendary director and comedian, though he's optimistic the country will get through these four years more or less intact.
Subscribe To "The Late Show" Channel HERE: http://bit.ly/ColbertYouTube
For more content from "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert", click HERE: http://bit.ly/1AKISnR
Watch full episodes of "The Late Show" HERE: http://bit.ly/1Puei40
Like "The Late Show" on Facebook HERE: http://on.fb.me/1df139Y
Follow "The Late Show" on Twitter HERE: http://bit.ly/1dMzZzG
Follow "The Late Show" on Google+ HERE: http://bit.ly/1JlGgzw
Follow "The Late Show" on Instagram HERE: http://bit.ly/29wfREj
Follow "The Late Show" on Tumblr HERE: http://bit.ly/29DVvtR
Watch The Late Show with Stephen Colbert weeknights at 11:35 PM ET/10:35 PM CT. Only on CBS.
G...

published: 23 Nov 2016

John Waters: Behind the Pencil Moustache

Go inside the home and mind of John Waters as we take a closer look inside his Baltimore home before we kick off a week of his controversial films in JOHNWATERS PRESENTS: FILMS OF BAD TASTE on Monday August 11 at 9.30pm.

John Waters on Q TV

John Waters introduces Trog | BFI

Writer-director John Waters explains to BFI programmer Justin Johnson why he is a fan of Trog (1970), the much derided sci-fi film starring Joan Crawford. Waters interviews Joe Cornelius, who plays Trog, who recalls what it was like working with Crawford and gives his verdict on seeing the film again after 45 years.
Subscribe: http://bit.ly/subscribetotheBFI.
More from John Waters & the BFI: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXvkgGofjDzhxPA01PTd8m9Kyv8nmTqOx
Watch more on the BFI Player: http://player.bfi.org.uk/
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/BFI
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BritishFilmInstitute
Follow us on Google+: https://plus.google.com/+britishfilminstitute/

Divine Trash Documentary 1998

The life and times of Baltimore film maker and midnight movie pioneer, John Waters. Intercut with a 1972 interview of Waters are clips from his first films and recent interviews with his parents, his brother, Divine's mom, actors and crew, other directors, film critics, a film curator, psychologists, and Maryland's last censor, who shudders at the memory of Waters's pictures. Also included is footage of Waters making his early movies, culminating in an up-close and in-depth look at Pink Flamingos: the script, the set, the filming conditions, its editing, its distribution, and its impact. In sweet ways, this documentary is also a celebration of Divine (1945-1988).

published: 07 Dec 2016

John Waters: Coming Out Is So Square

http://bigthink.com
John Waters knew he was gay the moment he saw Elvis Presley, but people rarely asked him about his sexuality because they feared it was something "worse" than homosexuality. "They were afraid to hear the answer," he says.
Question: How did you come out?John Waters: Coming out! It's just so square to me. I mean, I always was gay. I knew I was gay the moment I saw Elvis Presley, when I was probably about 10 years old. I thought, what the hell is that? But I know it's important to some people, but I just... no one, I never just came out and made it a ceremony or an announcement. Like when people say, "Are you a bottom or a top?" What is it, a political party? It depends. It's amazing to me the seriousness with these questions we're asked about. To me, mos...

published: 14 Jun 2011

John Waters reads from 'Shock Value' (part 1 of 2)

The inimitable John Waters reading from his book 'Shock Value' -- this is the first of two parts.
The below link goes to John Waters' Amazon page:
http://www.amazon.com/John-Waters/e/B000APM1ES/ref=sr_tc_2_0?qid=1402569014&sr=1-2-ent

Director John Waters With Jay Leno 2000

John Waters: on stage with the ‘Pope of Trash’ (Extended) | BFI

Subscribe: http://bit.ly/subscribetotheBFI.
AuteurJohn Waters joins season curator Justin Johnson to talk about his film career. Moved by the fact that his work attracts younger viewers as his career progresses, Waters pays tribute to like-minded friends he has used as actors and discusses the inspiration behind his vibrant creativity.
More from John Waters & the BFI: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXvkgGofjDzhxPA01PTd8m9Kyv8nmTqOx
Watch more on the BFI Player: http://player.bfi.org.uk/
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/BFI
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BritishFilmInstitute
Follow us on Google+: https://plus.google.com/+britishfilminstitute/

What Does It Take To Shock John Waters?

"The election shocked me" says the legendary director and comedian, though he's optimistic the country will get through these four years more or less intact.
S...

"The election shocked me" says the legendary director and comedian, though he's optimistic the country will get through these four years more or less intact.
Subscribe To "The Late Show" Channel HERE: http://bit.ly/ColbertYouTube
For more content from "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert", click HERE: http://bit.ly/1AKISnR
Watch full episodes of "The Late Show" HERE: http://bit.ly/1Puei40
Like "The Late Show" on Facebook HERE: http://on.fb.me/1df139Y
Follow "The Late Show" on Twitter HERE: http://bit.ly/1dMzZzG
Follow "The Late Show" on Google+ HERE: http://bit.ly/1JlGgzw
Follow "The Late Show" on Instagram HERE: http://bit.ly/29wfREj
Follow "The Late Show" on Tumblr HERE: http://bit.ly/29DVvtR
Watch The Late Show with Stephen Colbert weeknights at 11:35 PM ET/10:35 PM CT. Only on CBS.
Get the CBS app for iPhone & iPad! Click HERE: http://bit.ly/12rLxge
Get new episodes of shows you love across devices the next day, stream live TV, and watch full seasons of CBS fan favorites anytime, anywhere with CBS All Access. Try it free! http://bit.ly/1OQA29B
---
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert is the premier late night talk show on CBS, airing at 11:35pm EST, streaming online via CBS All Access, and delivered to the International Space Station on a USB drive taped to a weather balloon. Every night, viewers can expect: Comedy, humor, funny moments, witty interviews, celebrities, famous people, movie stars, bits, humorous celebrities doing bits, funny celebs, big group photos of every star from Hollywood, even the reclusive ones, plus also jokes.

"The election shocked me" says the legendary director and comedian, though he's optimistic the country will get through these four years more or less intact.
Subscribe To "The Late Show" Channel HERE: http://bit.ly/ColbertYouTube
For more content from "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert", click HERE: http://bit.ly/1AKISnR
Watch full episodes of "The Late Show" HERE: http://bit.ly/1Puei40
Like "The Late Show" on Facebook HERE: http://on.fb.me/1df139Y
Follow "The Late Show" on Twitter HERE: http://bit.ly/1dMzZzG
Follow "The Late Show" on Google+ HERE: http://bit.ly/1JlGgzw
Follow "The Late Show" on Instagram HERE: http://bit.ly/29wfREj
Follow "The Late Show" on Tumblr HERE: http://bit.ly/29DVvtR
Watch The Late Show with Stephen Colbert weeknights at 11:35 PM ET/10:35 PM CT. Only on CBS.
Get the CBS app for iPhone & iPad! Click HERE: http://bit.ly/12rLxge
Get new episodes of shows you love across devices the next day, stream live TV, and watch full seasons of CBS fan favorites anytime, anywhere with CBS All Access. Try it free! http://bit.ly/1OQA29B
---
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert is the premier late night talk show on CBS, airing at 11:35pm EST, streaming online via CBS All Access, and delivered to the International Space Station on a USB drive taped to a weather balloon. Every night, viewers can expect: Comedy, humor, funny moments, witty interviews, celebrities, famous people, movie stars, bits, humorous celebrities doing bits, funny celebs, big group photos of every star from Hollywood, even the reclusive ones, plus also jokes.

John Waters: Behind the Pencil Moustache

Go inside the home and mind of John Waters as we take a closer look inside his Baltimore home before we kick off a week of his controversial films in JOHN WATER...

Go inside the home and mind of John Waters as we take a closer look inside his Baltimore home before we kick off a week of his controversial films in JOHNWATERS PRESENTS: FILMS OF BAD TASTE on Monday August 11 at 9.30pm.

Go inside the home and mind of John Waters as we take a closer look inside his Baltimore home before we kick off a week of his controversial films in JOHNWATERS PRESENTS: FILMS OF BAD TASTE on Monday August 11 at 9.30pm.

Writer-director John Waters explains to BFI programmer Justin Johnson why he is a fan of Trog (1970), the much derided sci-fi film starring Joan Crawford. Waters interviews Joe Cornelius, who plays Trog, who recalls what it was like working with Crawford and gives his verdict on seeing the film again after 45 years.
Subscribe: http://bit.ly/subscribetotheBFI.
More from John Waters & the BFI: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXvkgGofjDzhxPA01PTd8m9Kyv8nmTqOx
Watch more on the BFI Player: http://player.bfi.org.uk/
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/BFI
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BritishFilmInstitute
Follow us on Google+: https://plus.google.com/+britishfilminstitute/

Writer-director John Waters explains to BFI programmer Justin Johnson why he is a fan of Trog (1970), the much derided sci-fi film starring Joan Crawford. Waters interviews Joe Cornelius, who plays Trog, who recalls what it was like working with Crawford and gives his verdict on seeing the film again after 45 years.
Subscribe: http://bit.ly/subscribetotheBFI.
More from John Waters & the BFI: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXvkgGofjDzhxPA01PTd8m9Kyv8nmTqOx
Watch more on the BFI Player: http://player.bfi.org.uk/
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/BFI
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Follow us on Google+: https://plus.google.com/+britishfilminstitute/

The life and times of Baltimore film maker and midnight movie pioneer, John Waters. Intercut with a 1972 interview of Waters are clips from his first films and recent interviews with his parents, his brother, Divine's mom, actors and crew, other directors, film critics, a film curator, psychologists, and Maryland's last censor, who shudders at the memory of Waters's pictures. Also included is footage of Waters making his early movies, culminating in an up-close and in-depth look at Pink Flamingos: the script, the set, the filming conditions, its editing, its distribution, and its impact. In sweet ways, this documentary is also a celebration of Divine (1945-1988).

The life and times of Baltimore film maker and midnight movie pioneer, John Waters. Intercut with a 1972 interview of Waters are clips from his first films and recent interviews with his parents, his brother, Divine's mom, actors and crew, other directors, film critics, a film curator, psychologists, and Maryland's last censor, who shudders at the memory of Waters's pictures. Also included is footage of Waters making his early movies, culminating in an up-close and in-depth look at Pink Flamingos: the script, the set, the filming conditions, its editing, its distribution, and its impact. In sweet ways, this documentary is also a celebration of Divine (1945-1988).

John Waters: Coming Out Is So Square

http://bigthink.com
John Waters knew he was gay the moment he saw Elvis Presley, but people rarely asked him about his sexuality because they feared it was som...

http://bigthink.com
John Waters knew he was gay the moment he saw Elvis Presley, but people rarely asked him about his sexuality because they feared it was something "worse" than homosexuality. "They were afraid to hear the answer," he says.
Question: How did you come out?John Waters: Coming out! It's just so square to me. I mean, I always was gay. I knew I was gay the moment I saw Elvis Presley, when I was probably about 10 years old. I thought, what the hell is that? But I know it's important to some people, but I just... no one, I never just came out and made it a ceremony or an announcement. Like when people say, "Are you a bottom or a top?" What is it, a political party? It depends. It's amazing to me the seriousness with these questions we're asked about. To me, most of the gay people I know sort of just always were, but they didn't only hang around with gay people, they hung around with straight people that... I'm for mix. I'm against separatism of any kind. I don't like men that call women fish and I hate that. I hate separate lesbians that hate men. I like them better though. But I know it's important to people. No one ever asked me if I was gay because they thought something was worse than that. They were afraid to hear the answer. I was on the cover of the Advocate and it said, "The World's Most Out Director," but they never asked me if I was gay. They never asked me a gay question. I was waiting. And my father once said, "Do you have to say it in USA Today?" so I didn't. I thought that was fair, you know. He doesn't care if I'm on the cover of Out because his friends don't see that. So I thought it was a funny question. I honored that, sure. USA Today would never ask you that question anyway. So I'm for it, but I kind of just always felt like I always was. I mean, I was on the cover of a gay magazine in like 1972, something called GayTimes and it wasn't because I was brave, just nobody else wanted to put me on the cover. Really. So, and my films have... I've always said that my audiences, even gay people that don't get along with other gay people, black people that don't get along with other black people. Minorities that can't stand even the rules of their own minority. And I'm one of them. Too much gaily correctness makes me crazy too. You now, that GlAAD came out against this tranny movie? Oh please, we have more enemies than that. It was like, what, are gay people losing their sense of humor they have to be perfect now? I'm for gay villains. I think it's healthy to admit there's bad gay movies. Gay's not enough, it's a good start. Question: As gay culture has entered the mainstream has it become more homogeneous?John Waters: I think, yeah. I don't understand what gay people want to be like everybody else. To me, we were outlaws, we used our wit for fighting words, you know, act up, act bad I wanted. But I understand that people... straight, gay, people want to get married, they want to have children. I'm for that, I'm all for that. I'm for like, why would anyone be against gay adoption? I can't understand it, or when celebrities get babies. Madonna's child won the lottery, if you ask me. The one she just got in Africa. I'm for anybody getting any kid, if they can love it. And I'm for abortion. If you can't love your kid, don't have it because it will grow up and kill us.
Recorded September 10, 2010 Interviewed by Max Miller

http://bigthink.com
John Waters knew he was gay the moment he saw Elvis Presley, but people rarely asked him about his sexuality because they feared it was something "worse" than homosexuality. "They were afraid to hear the answer," he says.
Question: How did you come out?John Waters: Coming out! It's just so square to me. I mean, I always was gay. I knew I was gay the moment I saw Elvis Presley, when I was probably about 10 years old. I thought, what the hell is that? But I know it's important to some people, but I just... no one, I never just came out and made it a ceremony or an announcement. Like when people say, "Are you a bottom or a top?" What is it, a political party? It depends. It's amazing to me the seriousness with these questions we're asked about. To me, most of the gay people I know sort of just always were, but they didn't only hang around with gay people, they hung around with straight people that... I'm for mix. I'm against separatism of any kind. I don't like men that call women fish and I hate that. I hate separate lesbians that hate men. I like them better though. But I know it's important to people. No one ever asked me if I was gay because they thought something was worse than that. They were afraid to hear the answer. I was on the cover of the Advocate and it said, "The World's Most Out Director," but they never asked me if I was gay. They never asked me a gay question. I was waiting. And my father once said, "Do you have to say it in USA Today?" so I didn't. I thought that was fair, you know. He doesn't care if I'm on the cover of Out because his friends don't see that. So I thought it was a funny question. I honored that, sure. USA Today would never ask you that question anyway. So I'm for it, but I kind of just always felt like I always was. I mean, I was on the cover of a gay magazine in like 1972, something called GayTimes and it wasn't because I was brave, just nobody else wanted to put me on the cover. Really. So, and my films have... I've always said that my audiences, even gay people that don't get along with other gay people, black people that don't get along with other black people. Minorities that can't stand even the rules of their own minority. And I'm one of them. Too much gaily correctness makes me crazy too. You now, that GlAAD came out against this tranny movie? Oh please, we have more enemies than that. It was like, what, are gay people losing their sense of humor they have to be perfect now? I'm for gay villains. I think it's healthy to admit there's bad gay movies. Gay's not enough, it's a good start. Question: As gay culture has entered the mainstream has it become more homogeneous?John Waters: I think, yeah. I don't understand what gay people want to be like everybody else. To me, we were outlaws, we used our wit for fighting words, you know, act up, act bad I wanted. But I understand that people... straight, gay, people want to get married, they want to have children. I'm for that, I'm all for that. I'm for like, why would anyone be against gay adoption? I can't understand it, or when celebrities get babies. Madonna's child won the lottery, if you ask me. The one she just got in Africa. I'm for anybody getting any kid, if they can love it. And I'm for abortion. If you can't love your kid, don't have it because it will grow up and kill us.
Recorded September 10, 2010 Interviewed by Max Miller

The inimitable John Waters reading from his book 'Shock Value' -- this is the first of two parts.
The below link goes to John Waters' Amazon page:
http://www.amazon.com/John-Waters/e/B000APM1ES/ref=sr_tc_2_0?qid=1402569014&sr=1-2-ent

The inimitable John Waters reading from his book 'Shock Value' -- this is the first of two parts.
The below link goes to John Waters' Amazon page:
http://www.amazon.com/John-Waters/e/B000APM1ES/ref=sr_tc_2_0?qid=1402569014&sr=1-2-ent

Subscribe: http://bit.ly/subscribetotheBFI.
AuteurJohn Waters joins season curator Justin Johnson to talk about his film career. Moved by the fact that his work attracts younger viewers as his career progresses, Waters pays tribute to like-minded friends he has used as actors and discusses the inspiration behind his vibrant creativity.
More from John Waters & the BFI: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXvkgGofjDzhxPA01PTd8m9Kyv8nmTqOx
Watch more on the BFI Player: http://player.bfi.org.uk/
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/BFI
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BritishFilmInstitute
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Subscribe: http://bit.ly/subscribetotheBFI.
AuteurJohn Waters joins season curator Justin Johnson to talk about his film career. Moved by the fact that his work attracts younger viewers as his career progresses, Waters pays tribute to like-minded friends he has used as actors and discusses the inspiration behind his vibrant creativity.
More from John Waters & the BFI: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXvkgGofjDzhxPA01PTd8m9Kyv8nmTqOx
Watch more on the BFI Player: http://player.bfi.org.uk/
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/BFI
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Movies That Shook the World: Pink Flamingos

Part of a nine-part series examining the impact on society of controversial films includes remarks by critics, actors, directors, producers and scholars, who co...

Part of a nine-part series examining the impact on society of controversial films includes remarks by critics, actors, directors, producers and scholars, who comment on the content and context of films.
Pink Flamingos is a 1972American transgressive comedy film directed by John Waters. When the film was initially released, it caused a huge degree of controversy and thus became one of the most notorious cult films ever made. It made an underground star of the flamboyant female impersonator, Divine. The film also stars David Lochary, Mary Vivian Pearce, Mink Stole, Danny Mills, Cookie Mueller, and Edith Massey. Produced on a budget of only $10,000, it was mostly shot on weekends in Phoenix, a suburb of Baltimore, Maryland. After screenings at universities across the U.S. including Harvard College in 1973, the film was picked up by New Line Cinema and became a nationally known film. The creator, cast, crew and commentators discuss the effect the film has had in world culture.

Part of a nine-part series examining the impact on society of controversial films includes remarks by critics, actors, directors, producers and scholars, who comment on the content and context of films.
Pink Flamingos is a 1972American transgressive comedy film directed by John Waters. When the film was initially released, it caused a huge degree of controversy and thus became one of the most notorious cult films ever made. It made an underground star of the flamboyant female impersonator, Divine. The film also stars David Lochary, Mary Vivian Pearce, Mink Stole, Danny Mills, Cookie Mueller, and Edith Massey. Produced on a budget of only $10,000, it was mostly shot on weekends in Phoenix, a suburb of Baltimore, Maryland. After screenings at universities across the U.S. including Harvard College in 1973, the film was picked up by New Line Cinema and became a nationally known film. The creator, cast, crew and commentators discuss the effect the film has had in world culture.

John Waters: on stage with the ‘Pope of Trash’ (Extended) | BFI

Subscribe: http://bit.ly/subscribetotheBFI.
AuteurJohn Waters joins season curator Justin Johnson to talk about his film career. Moved by the fact that his work attracts younger viewers as his career progresses, Waters pays tribute to like-minded friends he has used as actors and discusses the inspiration behind his vibrant creativity.
More from John Waters & the BFI: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXvkgGofjDzhxPA01PTd8m9Kyv8nmTqOx
Watch more on the BFI Player: http://player.bfi.org.uk/
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published: 04 Nov 2015

John Waters 'Ireland and the End of Debate'

John Waters speaking to the Iona Institute about how the range of acceptable opinion in Ireland has become narrower and narrower over time, largely thanks to a complicit media that demonizes voices that dissent from the secular liberal consensus.
Good read by John Waters:
http://villagemagazine.ie/index.php/2014/04/john-waters-answers-the-liberal-establishment-and-the-craven-irish-times/#disqus_thread

John Waters: What has happened to Ireland?

An Ireland that produced heroes such as Padraig Pearse could now descend into infamy as the first country to ever vote away the right to life. John Waters, author, playwright and former journalist describes the degeneration of a nation.

Divine Trash Documentary 1998

The life and times of Baltimore film maker and midnight movie pioneer, John Waters. Intercut with a 1972 interview of Waters are clips from his first films and recent interviews with his parents, his brother, Divine's mom, actors and crew, other directors, film critics, a film curator, psychologists, and Maryland's last censor, who shudders at the memory of Waters's pictures. Also included is footage of Waters making his early movies, culminating in an up-close and in-depth look at Pink Flamingos: the script, the set, the filming conditions, its editing, its distribution, and its impact. In sweet ways, this documentary is also a celebration of Divine (1945-1988).

published: 07 Dec 2016

John Waters On "Multiple Maniacs" | BUILD Series

Join the multi-talented John Waters as he discusses his cult-comedy film "Multiple Maniacs" and its return to theaters. The film follows The Cavalcade of Perversion, a traveling freak-show, which turns out to be a front for a band of psychotic kidnappers and murderers.
For full schedule and more videos go to http://aol.com/build
Follow us:
TWITTER: https://www.twitter.com/AOLBUILD
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/aolbuild/
INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/aol.build/
SNAPCHAT: @AOLBUILD Interview at AOL HQ in NYC for BUILDSeries. For full schedule and more videos go to http://aol.com/build
Follow us:
TWITTER: https://www.twitter.com/BUILDseriesNYC
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/BUILDseriesNYC
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SNAPCHAT: BUILDseriesNYC

John Waters reads from 'Crackpot' (1 of 2)

Writer, filmmaker, and future presidential candidate (I hope!) John Waters reads from his book 'Crackpot'. This is part one of two parts. John Waters' Amazon.com page can be accessed at the below link:
http://www.amazon.com/John-Waters/e/B000APM1ES/ref=sr_tc_2_0?qid=1392292360&sr=1-2-ent

published: 13 Feb 2014

John Waters: Men's Voices Ireland Conference 2017

The journalist and author speaks on "The attack on fathers, the attack on family."

Subscribe: http://bit.ly/subscribetotheBFI.
AuteurJohn Waters joins season curator Justin Johnson to talk about his film career. Moved by the fact that his work attracts younger viewers as his career progresses, Waters pays tribute to like-minded friends he has used as actors and discusses the inspiration behind his vibrant creativity.
More from John Waters & the BFI: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXvkgGofjDzhxPA01PTd8m9Kyv8nmTqOx
Watch more on the BFI Player: http://player.bfi.org.uk/
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/BFI
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BritishFilmInstitute
Follow us on Google+: https://plus.google.com/+britishfilminstitute/

Subscribe: http://bit.ly/subscribetotheBFI.
AuteurJohn Waters joins season curator Justin Johnson to talk about his film career. Moved by the fact that his work attracts younger viewers as his career progresses, Waters pays tribute to like-minded friends he has used as actors and discusses the inspiration behind his vibrant creativity.
More from John Waters & the BFI: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXvkgGofjDzhxPA01PTd8m9Kyv8nmTqOx
Watch more on the BFI Player: http://player.bfi.org.uk/
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/BFI
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BritishFilmInstitute
Follow us on Google+: https://plus.google.com/+britishfilminstitute/

John Waters speaking to the Iona Institute about how the range of acceptable opinion in Ireland has become narrower and narrower over time, largely thanks to a complicit media that demonizes voices that dissent from the secular liberal consensus.
Good read by John Waters:
http://villagemagazine.ie/index.php/2014/04/john-waters-answers-the-liberal-establishment-and-the-craven-irish-times/#disqus_thread

John Waters speaking to the Iona Institute about how the range of acceptable opinion in Ireland has become narrower and narrower over time, largely thanks to a complicit media that demonizes voices that dissent from the secular liberal consensus.
Good read by John Waters:
http://villagemagazine.ie/index.php/2014/04/john-waters-answers-the-liberal-establishment-and-the-craven-irish-times/#disqus_thread

An Ireland that produced heroes such as Padraig Pearse could now descend into infamy as the first country to ever vote away the right to life. John Waters, author, playwright and former journalist describes the degeneration of a nation.

An Ireland that produced heroes such as Padraig Pearse could now descend into infamy as the first country to ever vote away the right to life. John Waters, author, playwright and former journalist describes the degeneration of a nation.

The life and times of Baltimore film maker and midnight movie pioneer, John Waters. Intercut with a 1972 interview of Waters are clips from his first films and recent interviews with his parents, his brother, Divine's mom, actors and crew, other directors, film critics, a film curator, psychologists, and Maryland's last censor, who shudders at the memory of Waters's pictures. Also included is footage of Waters making his early movies, culminating in an up-close and in-depth look at Pink Flamingos: the script, the set, the filming conditions, its editing, its distribution, and its impact. In sweet ways, this documentary is also a celebration of Divine (1945-1988).

The life and times of Baltimore film maker and midnight movie pioneer, John Waters. Intercut with a 1972 interview of Waters are clips from his first films and recent interviews with his parents, his brother, Divine's mom, actors and crew, other directors, film critics, a film curator, psychologists, and Maryland's last censor, who shudders at the memory of Waters's pictures. Also included is footage of Waters making his early movies, culminating in an up-close and in-depth look at Pink Flamingos: the script, the set, the filming conditions, its editing, its distribution, and its impact. In sweet ways, this documentary is also a celebration of Divine (1945-1988).

Join the multi-talented John Waters as he discusses his cult-comedy film "Multiple Maniacs" and its return to theaters. The film follows The Cavalcade of Perversion, a traveling freak-show, which turns out to be a front for a band of psychotic kidnappers and murderers.
For full schedule and more videos go to http://aol.com/build
Follow us:
TWITTER: https://www.twitter.com/AOLBUILD
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/aolbuild/
INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/aol.build/
SNAPCHAT: @AOLBUILD Interview at AOL HQ in NYC for BUILDSeries. For full schedule and more videos go to http://aol.com/build
Follow us:
TWITTER: https://www.twitter.com/BUILDseriesNYC
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/BUILDseriesNYC
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SNAPCHAT: BUILDseriesNYC

Join the multi-talented John Waters as he discusses his cult-comedy film "Multiple Maniacs" and its return to theaters. The film follows The Cavalcade of Perversion, a traveling freak-show, which turns out to be a front for a band of psychotic kidnappers and murderers.
For full schedule and more videos go to http://aol.com/build
Follow us:
TWITTER: https://www.twitter.com/AOLBUILD
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/aolbuild/
INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/aol.build/
SNAPCHAT: @AOLBUILD Interview at AOL HQ in NYC for BUILDSeries. For full schedule and more videos go to http://aol.com/build
Follow us:
TWITTER: https://www.twitter.com/BUILDseriesNYC
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/BUILDseriesNYC
INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/BUILDseriesNYC
SNAPCHAT: BUILDseriesNYC

John Waters reads from 'Crackpot' (1 of 2)

Writer, filmmaker, and future presidential candidate (I hope!) John Waters reads from his book 'Crackpot'. This is part one of two parts. John Waters' Amazon....

Writer, filmmaker, and future presidential candidate (I hope!) John Waters reads from his book 'Crackpot'. This is part one of two parts. John Waters' Amazon.com page can be accessed at the below link:
http://www.amazon.com/John-Waters/e/B000APM1ES/ref=sr_tc_2_0?qid=1392292360&sr=1-2-ent

Writer, filmmaker, and future presidential candidate (I hope!) John Waters reads from his book 'Crackpot'. This is part one of two parts. John Waters' Amazon.com page can be accessed at the below link:
http://www.amazon.com/John-Waters/e/B000APM1ES/ref=sr_tc_2_0?qid=1392292360&sr=1-2-ent

John Waters: on stage with the ‘Pope of Trash’ (Extended) | BFI

Subscribe: http://bit.ly/subscribetotheBFI.
AuteurJohn Waters joins season curator Justin Johnson to talk about his film career. Moved by the fact that his work attracts younger viewers as his career progresses, Waters pays tribute to like-minded friends he has used as actors and discusses the inspiration behind his vibrant creativity.
More from John Waters & the BFI: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXvkgGofjDzhxPA01PTd8m9Kyv8nmTqOx
Watch more on the BFI Player: http://player.bfi.org.uk/
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/BFI
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BritishFilmInstitute
Follow us on Google+: https://plus.google.com/+britishfilminstitute/

published: 04 Nov 2015

What Does It Take To Shock John Waters?

"The election shocked me" says the legendary director and comedian, though he's optimistic the country will get through these four years more or less intact.
Subscribe To "The Late Show" Channel HERE: http://bit.ly/ColbertYouTube
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G...

published: 23 Nov 2016

JOHN WATERS HAS FUN WITH LETTERMAN

John Waters interview (1994)

FilmmakerJohn Waters on "Serial Mom" and other films.
»»﴿───► See more on the Directors Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLIZqvqbtz9I04OH5IZee3L8FHY-Kt3I92
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John Waters: Coming Out Is So Square

http://bigthink.com
John Waters knew he was gay the moment he saw Elvis Presley, but people rarely asked him about his sexuality because they feared it was something "worse" than homosexuality. "They were afraid to hear the answer," he says.
Question: How did you come out?John Waters: Coming out! It's just so square to me. I mean, I always was gay. I knew I was gay the moment I saw Elvis Presley, when I was probably about 10 years old. I thought, what the hell is that? But I know it's important to some people, but I just... no one, I never just came out and made it a ceremony or an announcement. Like when people say, "Are you a bottom or a top?" What is it, a political party? It depends. It's amazing to me the seriousness with these questions we're asked about. To me, mos...

John Waters Interviewed on the Clive James Show (1990)

John Waters Interview: Hitchhiking Across the U.S. | The New York Times

The film director and author hitchhiked across the United States and lived to tell the tale.
Produced by: Jeremy Beiler
Read the story here: http://nyti.ms/1ioYLGW
Subscribe to the TimesVideo newsletter for free and get a handpicked selection of the best videos from The New York Times every week: http://bit.ly/timesvideonewsletter
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Whether it's reporting on conflicts abroad and political divisions at home, or covering the latest style trends and scientific developments, N...

John Waters: Behind the Pencil Moustache

Go inside the home and mind of John Waters as we take a closer look inside his Baltimore home before we kick off a week of his controversial films in JOHNWATERS PRESENTS: FILMS OF BAD TASTE on Monday August 11 at 9.30pm.

John Waters On "Multiple Maniacs" | BUILD Series

Join the multi-talented John Waters as he discusses his cult-comedy film "Multiple Maniacs" and its return to theaters. The film follows The Cavalcade of Perversion, a traveling freak-show, which turns out to be a front for a band of psychotic kidnappers and murderers.
For full schedule and more videos go to http://aol.com/build
Follow us:
TWITTER: https://www.twitter.com/AOLBUILD
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/aolbuild/
INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/aol.build/
SNAPCHAT: @AOLBUILD Interview at AOL HQ in NYC for BUILDSeries. For full schedule and more videos go to http://aol.com/build
Follow us:
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Subscribe: http://bit.ly/subscribetotheBFI.
AuteurJohn Waters joins season curator Justin Johnson to talk about his film career. Moved by the fact that his work attracts younger viewers as his career progresses, Waters pays tribute to like-minded friends he has used as actors and discusses the inspiration behind his vibrant creativity.
More from John Waters & the BFI: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXvkgGofjDzhxPA01PTd8m9Kyv8nmTqOx
Watch more on the BFI Player: http://player.bfi.org.uk/
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/BFI
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BritishFilmInstitute
Follow us on Google+: https://plus.google.com/+britishfilminstitute/

Subscribe: http://bit.ly/subscribetotheBFI.
AuteurJohn Waters joins season curator Justin Johnson to talk about his film career. Moved by the fact that his work attracts younger viewers as his career progresses, Waters pays tribute to like-minded friends he has used as actors and discusses the inspiration behind his vibrant creativity.
More from John Waters & the BFI: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXvkgGofjDzhxPA01PTd8m9Kyv8nmTqOx
Watch more on the BFI Player: http://player.bfi.org.uk/
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/BFI
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BritishFilmInstitute
Follow us on Google+: https://plus.google.com/+britishfilminstitute/

What Does It Take To Shock John Waters?

"The election shocked me" says the legendary director and comedian, though he's optimistic the country will get through these four years more or less intact.
S...

"The election shocked me" says the legendary director and comedian, though he's optimistic the country will get through these four years more or less intact.
Subscribe To "The Late Show" Channel HERE: http://bit.ly/ColbertYouTube
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"The election shocked me" says the legendary director and comedian, though he's optimistic the country will get through these four years more or less intact.
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The Late Show with Stephen Colbert is the premier late night talk show on CBS, airing at 11:35pm EST, streaming online via CBS All Access, and delivered to the International Space Station on a USB drive taped to a weather balloon. Every night, viewers can expect: Comedy, humor, funny moments, witty interviews, celebrities, famous people, movie stars, bits, humorous celebrities doing bits, funny celebs, big group photos of every star from Hollywood, even the reclusive ones, plus also jokes.

FilmmakerJohn Waters on "Serial Mom" and other films.
»»﴿───► See more on the Directors Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLIZqvqbtz9I04OH5IZee3L8FHY-Kt3I92
Check out the Patreon rewards! https://www.patreon.com/ManufacturingIntellect

FilmmakerJohn Waters on "Serial Mom" and other films.
»»﴿───► See more on the Directors Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLIZqvqbtz9I04OH5IZee3L8FHY-Kt3I92
Check out the Patreon rewards! https://www.patreon.com/ManufacturingIntellect

John Waters: Coming Out Is So Square

http://bigthink.com
John Waters knew he was gay the moment he saw Elvis Presley, but people rarely asked him about his sexuality because they feared it was som...

http://bigthink.com
John Waters knew he was gay the moment he saw Elvis Presley, but people rarely asked him about his sexuality because they feared it was something "worse" than homosexuality. "They were afraid to hear the answer," he says.
Question: How did you come out?John Waters: Coming out! It's just so square to me. I mean, I always was gay. I knew I was gay the moment I saw Elvis Presley, when I was probably about 10 years old. I thought, what the hell is that? But I know it's important to some people, but I just... no one, I never just came out and made it a ceremony or an announcement. Like when people say, "Are you a bottom or a top?" What is it, a political party? It depends. It's amazing to me the seriousness with these questions we're asked about. To me, most of the gay people I know sort of just always were, but they didn't only hang around with gay people, they hung around with straight people that... I'm for mix. I'm against separatism of any kind. I don't like men that call women fish and I hate that. I hate separate lesbians that hate men. I like them better though. But I know it's important to people. No one ever asked me if I was gay because they thought something was worse than that. They were afraid to hear the answer. I was on the cover of the Advocate and it said, "The World's Most Out Director," but they never asked me if I was gay. They never asked me a gay question. I was waiting. And my father once said, "Do you have to say it in USA Today?" so I didn't. I thought that was fair, you know. He doesn't care if I'm on the cover of Out because his friends don't see that. So I thought it was a funny question. I honored that, sure. USA Today would never ask you that question anyway. So I'm for it, but I kind of just always felt like I always was. I mean, I was on the cover of a gay magazine in like 1972, something called GayTimes and it wasn't because I was brave, just nobody else wanted to put me on the cover. Really. So, and my films have... I've always said that my audiences, even gay people that don't get along with other gay people, black people that don't get along with other black people. Minorities that can't stand even the rules of their own minority. And I'm one of them. Too much gaily correctness makes me crazy too. You now, that GlAAD came out against this tranny movie? Oh please, we have more enemies than that. It was like, what, are gay people losing their sense of humor they have to be perfect now? I'm for gay villains. I think it's healthy to admit there's bad gay movies. Gay's not enough, it's a good start. Question: As gay culture has entered the mainstream has it become more homogeneous?John Waters: I think, yeah. I don't understand what gay people want to be like everybody else. To me, we were outlaws, we used our wit for fighting words, you know, act up, act bad I wanted. But I understand that people... straight, gay, people want to get married, they want to have children. I'm for that, I'm all for that. I'm for like, why would anyone be against gay adoption? I can't understand it, or when celebrities get babies. Madonna's child won the lottery, if you ask me. The one she just got in Africa. I'm for anybody getting any kid, if they can love it. And I'm for abortion. If you can't love your kid, don't have it because it will grow up and kill us.
Recorded September 10, 2010 Interviewed by Max Miller

http://bigthink.com
John Waters knew he was gay the moment he saw Elvis Presley, but people rarely asked him about his sexuality because they feared it was something "worse" than homosexuality. "They were afraid to hear the answer," he says.
Question: How did you come out?John Waters: Coming out! It's just so square to me. I mean, I always was gay. I knew I was gay the moment I saw Elvis Presley, when I was probably about 10 years old. I thought, what the hell is that? But I know it's important to some people, but I just... no one, I never just came out and made it a ceremony or an announcement. Like when people say, "Are you a bottom or a top?" What is it, a political party? It depends. It's amazing to me the seriousness with these questions we're asked about. To me, most of the gay people I know sort of just always were, but they didn't only hang around with gay people, they hung around with straight people that... I'm for mix. I'm against separatism of any kind. I don't like men that call women fish and I hate that. I hate separate lesbians that hate men. I like them better though. But I know it's important to people. No one ever asked me if I was gay because they thought something was worse than that. They were afraid to hear the answer. I was on the cover of the Advocate and it said, "The World's Most Out Director," but they never asked me if I was gay. They never asked me a gay question. I was waiting. And my father once said, "Do you have to say it in USA Today?" so I didn't. I thought that was fair, you know. He doesn't care if I'm on the cover of Out because his friends don't see that. So I thought it was a funny question. I honored that, sure. USA Today would never ask you that question anyway. So I'm for it, but I kind of just always felt like I always was. I mean, I was on the cover of a gay magazine in like 1972, something called GayTimes and it wasn't because I was brave, just nobody else wanted to put me on the cover. Really. So, and my films have... I've always said that my audiences, even gay people that don't get along with other gay people, black people that don't get along with other black people. Minorities that can't stand even the rules of their own minority. And I'm one of them. Too much gaily correctness makes me crazy too. You now, that GlAAD came out against this tranny movie? Oh please, we have more enemies than that. It was like, what, are gay people losing their sense of humor they have to be perfect now? I'm for gay villains. I think it's healthy to admit there's bad gay movies. Gay's not enough, it's a good start. Question: As gay culture has entered the mainstream has it become more homogeneous?John Waters: I think, yeah. I don't understand what gay people want to be like everybody else. To me, we were outlaws, we used our wit for fighting words, you know, act up, act bad I wanted. But I understand that people... straight, gay, people want to get married, they want to have children. I'm for that, I'm all for that. I'm for like, why would anyone be against gay adoption? I can't understand it, or when celebrities get babies. Madonna's child won the lottery, if you ask me. The one she just got in Africa. I'm for anybody getting any kid, if they can love it. And I'm for abortion. If you can't love your kid, don't have it because it will grow up and kill us.
Recorded September 10, 2010 Interviewed by Max Miller

John Waters Interview: Hitchhiking Across the U.S. | The New York Times

The film director and author hitchhiked across the United States and lived to tell the tale.
Produced by: Jeremy Beiler
Read the story here: http://nyti.ms/1i...

The film director and author hitchhiked across the United States and lived to tell the tale.
Produced by: Jeremy Beiler
Read the story here: http://nyti.ms/1ioYLGW
Subscribe to the TimesVideo newsletter for free and get a handpicked selection of the best videos from The New York Times every week: http://bit.ly/timesvideonewsletter
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---------------------------------------------------------------
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John WatersInterview: Hitchhiking Across the U.S. | The New York Times
http://www.youtube.com/user/TheNewYorkTimes

The film director and author hitchhiked across the United States and lived to tell the tale.
Produced by: Jeremy Beiler
Read the story here: http://nyti.ms/1ioYLGW
Subscribe to the TimesVideo newsletter for free and get a handpicked selection of the best videos from The New York Times every week: http://bit.ly/timesvideonewsletter
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Watch more videos at: http://nytimes.com/video
---------------------------------------------------------------
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Whether it's reporting on conflicts abroad and political divisions at home, or covering the latest style trends and scientific developments, New York Times video journalists provide a revealing and unforgettable view of the world. It's all the news that's fit to watch. On YouTube.
John WatersInterview: Hitchhiking Across the U.S. | The New York Times
http://www.youtube.com/user/TheNewYorkTimes

John Waters: Behind the Pencil Moustache

Go inside the home and mind of John Waters as we take a closer look inside his Baltimore home before we kick off a week of his controversial films in JOHN WATER...

Go inside the home and mind of John Waters as we take a closer look inside his Baltimore home before we kick off a week of his controversial films in JOHNWATERS PRESENTS: FILMS OF BAD TASTE on Monday August 11 at 9.30pm.

Go inside the home and mind of John Waters as we take a closer look inside his Baltimore home before we kick off a week of his controversial films in JOHNWATERS PRESENTS: FILMS OF BAD TASTE on Monday August 11 at 9.30pm.

Join the multi-talented John Waters as he discusses his cult-comedy film "Multiple Maniacs" and its return to theaters. The film follows The Cavalcade of Perversion, a traveling freak-show, which turns out to be a front for a band of psychotic kidnappers and murderers.
For full schedule and more videos go to http://aol.com/build
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SNAPCHAT: @AOLBUILD Interview at AOL HQ in NYC for BUILDSeries. For full schedule and more videos go to http://aol.com/build
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Join the multi-talented John Waters as he discusses his cult-comedy film "Multiple Maniacs" and its return to theaters. The film follows The Cavalcade of Perversion, a traveling freak-show, which turns out to be a front for a band of psychotic kidnappers and murderers.
For full schedule and more videos go to http://aol.com/build
Follow us:
TWITTER: https://www.twitter.com/AOLBUILD
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/aolbuild/
INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/aol.build/
SNAPCHAT: @AOLBUILD Interview at AOL HQ in NYC for BUILDSeries. For full schedule and more videos go to http://aol.com/build
Follow us:
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SNAPCHAT: BUILDseriesNYC

Download "Baby, Please Don't Go" in the style of Muddy Waters in MP4 or MP3+G
formats available here: https://karaoke.stingray.com/search/song?searchText=Baby%2C%20Please%20Don%27t%20Go&karaokeId=KAR:G:12534
Sing, record and share this karaoke song online: http://www.thekaraokechannel.com/online/#sid=16698
For more karaoke songs with lyrics, SUBSCRIBE:
http://www.youtube.com/user/TheKARAOKEChannel?sub_confirmation=1
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Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheKARAOKEChannel
Twitter: https://twitter.com/karaokelounge
Get The KARAOKE ChannelMobile App, and take this karaoke song to go!
http://www.thekaraokechannel.com/mobile/

published: 13 Jul 2009

Karaoke - Simon & Garfunkel - Bridge Over Troubled Water

published: 21 Nov 2015

Mannish Boy - Muddy Water (Lyrics Karaoke) [ goodkaraokesongs.com ]

Mannish Boy - Muddy Water (LyricsKaraoke)
==================================================
Whoa yeah, oh yeah
Everythin' gonna be alright this mornin'
Oh yeah Now when I was a young boy, at the age of 5
My mother said I was gonna be the greatest man alive
But now I'm a man, I passed 21
I want you to believe me baby I had lots of fun I'm a man
SpellM-A child -N
That represents man
No B-O child -Y
That mean mannish boy I'm a man
I'm a full grown man
I'm a man
I'm a natural born lovers man
I'm a man child
I'm a rollin' stone
I'm a man child
I'm a hoochie coochie man Sittin' on the outside, just me and my mate
You know I'm made to move you honey
Come up 2 hours late
Was that a man? I spell M-A- child -N
That represents man
No B-O- child -Y
That mean mannish boy A man...

published: 15 Jun 2016

Beneath Still Waters in the style of Emmylou Harris karaoke video

Download "Beneath Still Waters" in the style of Emmylou Harris in MP4 or MP3+G
formats available here: https://karaoke.stingray.com/search/song?searchText=Beneath%20Still%20Waters&karaokeId=KAR:G:2381Sing, record and share this karaoke song online: http://www.thekaraokechannel.com/online/#sid=6484
For more karaoke songs with lyrics, SUBSCRIBE:
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Karaoke Download Store: http://karaoke.stingray.com
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Twitter: https://twitter.com/karaokelounge
Get The KARAOKE ChannelMobile App, and take this karaoke song to go!
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published: 02 Dec 2016

Karaoke On The Road Again - Canned Heat *

DownloadMP3: http://www.karaoke-version.com/mp3-backingtrack/canned-heat/on-the-road-again.htmlSingOnline: http://www.karafun.com/karaoke/canned-heat/on-the-road-again/
* This version contains a low volume vocal guide to help you learn the song. The karaoke version without the vocal guide is available on www.karafun.com. This recording is a cover of On The Road Again as made famous by Canned Heat - This version is not the original version, and is not performed by Canned Heat. This instrumental/playback version contains a vocal guide, the lyrics and backing vocals.
All the assets on KaraFun channels are used by permission under licensing agreement with rights holders (music composition, sound re-recording).

published: 14 Nov 2016

Proud Mary in the Style of "Creedence Clearwater Revival" karaoke video with lyrics (no lead vocal)

Download "Proud Mary" in the style of Creedence Clearwater Revival in MP4 or MP3+G
formats available here: https://karaoke.stingray.com/search/song?searchText=Proud%20Mary&karaokeId=KAR:G:6388
Sing, record and share this karaoke song online: http://www.thekaraokechannel.com/online/#sid=10551
For more karaoke songs with lyrics, SUBSCRIBE:
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Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheKARAOKEChannel
Twitter: https://twitter.com/karaokelounge
Get The KARAOKE ChannelMobile App, and take this karaoke song to go!
http://www.thekaraokechannel.com/mobile/

published: 08 Sep 2011

Cry Baby Please Mr Jailer Lyrics

published: 11 Aug 2014

Bill Withers - Ain't No Sunshine Karaoke BEST VERSION

https://www.facebook.com/JimmyLoramKaraoke Great song to sing! Soul, baby, soul!!!

Download "Baby, Please Don't Go" in the style of Muddy Waters in MP4 or MP3+G
formats available here: https://karaoke.stingray.com/search/song?searchText=Baby%2C%20Please%20Don%27t%20Go&karaokeId=KAR:G:12534
Sing, record and share this karaoke song online: http://www.thekaraokechannel.com/online/#sid=16698
For more karaoke songs with lyrics, SUBSCRIBE:
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Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheKARAOKEChannel
Twitter: https://twitter.com/karaokelounge
Get The KARAOKE ChannelMobile App, and take this karaoke song to go!
http://www.thekaraokechannel.com/mobile/

Download "Baby, Please Don't Go" in the style of Muddy Waters in MP4 or MP3+G
formats available here: https://karaoke.stingray.com/search/song?searchText=Baby%2C%20Please%20Don%27t%20Go&karaokeId=KAR:G:12534
Sing, record and share this karaoke song online: http://www.thekaraokechannel.com/online/#sid=16698
For more karaoke songs with lyrics, SUBSCRIBE:
http://www.youtube.com/user/TheKARAOKEChannel?sub_confirmation=1
Website: http://www.thekaraokechannel.com/
Karaoke Download Store: http://karaoke.stingray.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheKARAOKEChannel
Twitter: https://twitter.com/karaokelounge
Get The KARAOKE ChannelMobile App, and take this karaoke song to go!
http://www.thekaraokechannel.com/mobile/

Mannish Boy - Muddy Water (LyricsKaraoke)
==================================================
Whoa yeah, oh yeah
Everythin' gonna be alright this mornin'
Oh yeah Now when I was a young boy, at the age of 5
My mother said I was gonna be the greatest man alive
But now I'm a man, I passed 21
I want you to believe me baby I had lots of fun I'm a man
SpellM-A child -N
That represents man
No B-O child -Y
That mean mannish boy I'm a man
I'm a full grown man
I'm a man
I'm a natural born lovers man
I'm a man child
I'm a rollin' stone
I'm a man child
I'm a hoochie coochie man Sittin' on the outside, just me and my mate
You know I'm made to move you honey
Come up 2 hours late
Was that a man? I spell M-A- child -N
That represents man
No B-O- child -Y
That mean mannish boy A man
I'm a full grown man
I'm a man
I'm a natural born lovers man
I'm a man
I'm a rollin' stone
I'm a man child
I'm a hoochie coochie man I'm a natural born lovers man
I'm a rollin' stone
I'm a natural born lover
I'm a hoochie coochie man
Well, well Oh yeah, hey
I'm a natural born lovers man
Well
I'm a natural born lover
=====================================================

Mannish Boy - Muddy Water (LyricsKaraoke)
==================================================
Whoa yeah, oh yeah
Everythin' gonna be alright this mornin'
Oh yeah Now when I was a young boy, at the age of 5
My mother said I was gonna be the greatest man alive
But now I'm a man, I passed 21
I want you to believe me baby I had lots of fun I'm a man
SpellM-A child -N
That represents man
No B-O child -Y
That mean mannish boy I'm a man
I'm a full grown man
I'm a man
I'm a natural born lovers man
I'm a man child
I'm a rollin' stone
I'm a man child
I'm a hoochie coochie man Sittin' on the outside, just me and my mate
You know I'm made to move you honey
Come up 2 hours late
Was that a man? I spell M-A- child -N
That represents man
No B-O- child -Y
That mean mannish boy A man
I'm a full grown man
I'm a man
I'm a natural born lovers man
I'm a man
I'm a rollin' stone
I'm a man child
I'm a hoochie coochie man I'm a natural born lovers man
I'm a rollin' stone
I'm a natural born lover
I'm a hoochie coochie man
Well, well Oh yeah, hey
I'm a natural born lovers man
Well
I'm a natural born lover
=====================================================

Download "Beneath Still Waters" in the style of Emmylou Harris in MP4 or MP3+G
formats available here: https://karaoke.stingray.com/search/song?searchText=Beneath%20Still%20Waters&karaokeId=KAR:G:2381Sing, record and share this karaoke song online: http://www.thekaraokechannel.com/online/#sid=6484
For more karaoke songs with lyrics, SUBSCRIBE:
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Twitter: https://twitter.com/karaokelounge
Get The KARAOKE ChannelMobile App, and take this karaoke song to go!
http://www.thekaraokechannel.com/mobile/

Download "Beneath Still Waters" in the style of Emmylou Harris in MP4 or MP3+G
formats available here: https://karaoke.stingray.com/search/song?searchText=Beneath%20Still%20Waters&karaokeId=KAR:G:2381Sing, record and share this karaoke song online: http://www.thekaraokechannel.com/online/#sid=6484
For more karaoke songs with lyrics, SUBSCRIBE:
http://www.youtube.com/user/TheKARAOKEChannel?sub_confirmation=1
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Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheKARAOKEChannel
Twitter: https://twitter.com/karaokelounge
Get The KARAOKE ChannelMobile App, and take this karaoke song to go!
http://www.thekaraokechannel.com/mobile/

DownloadMP3: http://www.karaoke-version.com/mp3-backingtrack/canned-heat/on-the-road-again.htmlSingOnline: http://www.karafun.com/karaoke/canned-heat/on-the-road-again/
* This version contains a low volume vocal guide to help you learn the song. The karaoke version without the vocal guide is available on www.karafun.com. This recording is a cover of On The Road Again as made famous by Canned Heat - This version is not the original version, and is not performed by Canned Heat. This instrumental/playback version contains a vocal guide, the lyrics and backing vocals.
All the assets on KaraFun channels are used by permission under licensing agreement with rights holders (music composition, sound re-recording).

DownloadMP3: http://www.karaoke-version.com/mp3-backingtrack/canned-heat/on-the-road-again.htmlSingOnline: http://www.karafun.com/karaoke/canned-heat/on-the-road-again/
* This version contains a low volume vocal guide to help you learn the song. The karaoke version without the vocal guide is available on www.karafun.com. This recording is a cover of On The Road Again as made famous by Canned Heat - This version is not the original version, and is not performed by Canned Heat. This instrumental/playback version contains a vocal guide, the lyrics and backing vocals.
All the assets on KaraFun channels are used by permission under licensing agreement with rights holders (music composition, sound re-recording).

published:14 Nov 2016

views:11034

back

Proud Mary in the Style of "Creedence Clearwater Revival" karaoke video with lyrics (no lead vocal)

Download "Proud Mary" in the style of Creedence Clearwater Revival in MP4 or MP3+G
formats available here: https://karaoke.stingray.com/search/song?searchText=Proud%20Mary&karaokeId=KAR:G:6388
Sing, record and share this karaoke song online: http://www.thekaraokechannel.com/online/#sid=10551
For more karaoke songs with lyrics, SUBSCRIBE:
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Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheKARAOKEChannel
Twitter: https://twitter.com/karaokelounge
Get The KARAOKE ChannelMobile App, and take this karaoke song to go!
http://www.thekaraokechannel.com/mobile/

Download "Proud Mary" in the style of Creedence Clearwater Revival in MP4 or MP3+G
formats available here: https://karaoke.stingray.com/search/song?searchText=Proud%20Mary&karaokeId=KAR:G:6388
Sing, record and share this karaoke song online: http://www.thekaraokechannel.com/online/#sid=10551
For more karaoke songs with lyrics, SUBSCRIBE:
http://www.youtube.com/user/TheKARAOKEChannel?sub_confirmation=1
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Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheKARAOKEChannel
Twitter: https://twitter.com/karaokelounge
Get The KARAOKE ChannelMobile App, and take this karaoke song to go!
http://www.thekaraokechannel.com/mobile/

What Does It Take To Shock John Waters?

"The election shocked me" says the legendary director and comedian, though he's optimistic the country will get through these four years more or less intact.
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7:41

John Waters: Behind the Pencil Moustache

Go inside the home and mind of John Waters as we take a closer look inside his Baltimore h...

John Waters: Behind the Pencil Moustache

Go inside the home and mind of John Waters as we take a closer look inside his Baltimore home before we kick off a week of his controversial films in JOHNWATERS PRESENTS: FILMS OF BAD TASTE on Monday August 11 at 9.30pm.

2:06

John Waters on Baltimore and The Wire

Cult film director John Waters talks to Richard about how well TV show The Wire portrayed ...

John Waters introduces Trog | BFI

Writer-director John Waters explains to BFI programmer Justin Johnson why he is a fan of Trog (1970), the much derided sci-fi film starring Joan Crawford. Waters interviews Joe Cornelius, who plays Trog, who recalls what it was like working with Crawford and gives his verdict on seeing the film again after 45 years.
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More from John Waters & the BFI: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXvkgGofjDzhxPA01PTd8m9Kyv8nmTqOx
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Divine Trash Documentary 1998

The life and times of Baltimore film maker and midnight movie pioneer, John Waters. Intercut with a 1972 interview of Waters are clips from his first films and recent interviews with his parents, his brother, Divine's mom, actors and crew, other directors, film critics, a film curator, psychologists, and Maryland's last censor, who shudders at the memory of Waters's pictures. Also included is footage of Waters making his early movies, culminating in an up-close and in-depth look at Pink Flamingos: the script, the set, the filming conditions, its editing, its distribution, and its impact. In sweet ways, this documentary is also a celebration of Divine (1945-1988).

3:03

John Waters: Coming Out Is So Square

http://bigthink.com
John Waters knew he was gay the moment he saw Elvis Presley, but peop...

John Waters: Coming Out Is So Square

http://bigthink.com
John Waters knew he was gay the moment he saw Elvis Presley, but people rarely asked him about his sexuality because they feared it was something "worse" than homosexuality. "They were afraid to hear the answer," he says.
Question: How did you come out?John Waters: Coming out! It's just so square to me. I mean, I always was gay. I knew I was gay the moment I saw Elvis Presley, when I was probably about 10 years old. I thought, what the hell is that? But I know it's important to some people, but I just... no one, I never just came out and made it a ceremony or an announcement. Like when people say, "Are you a bottom or a top?" What is it, a political party? It depends. It's amazing to me the seriousness with these questions we're asked about. To me, most of the gay people I know sort of just always were, but they didn't only hang around with gay people, they hung around with straight people that... I'm for mix. I'm against separatism of any kind. I don't like men that call women fish and I hate that. I hate separate lesbians that hate men. I like them better though. But I know it's important to people. No one ever asked me if I was gay because they thought something was worse than that. They were afraid to hear the answer. I was on the cover of the Advocate and it said, "The World's Most Out Director," but they never asked me if I was gay. They never asked me a gay question. I was waiting. And my father once said, "Do you have to say it in USA Today?" so I didn't. I thought that was fair, you know. He doesn't care if I'm on the cover of Out because his friends don't see that. So I thought it was a funny question. I honored that, sure. USA Today would never ask you that question anyway. So I'm for it, but I kind of just always felt like I always was. I mean, I was on the cover of a gay magazine in like 1972, something called GayTimes and it wasn't because I was brave, just nobody else wanted to put me on the cover. Really. So, and my films have... I've always said that my audiences, even gay people that don't get along with other gay people, black people that don't get along with other black people. Minorities that can't stand even the rules of their own minority. And I'm one of them. Too much gaily correctness makes me crazy too. You now, that GlAAD came out against this tranny movie? Oh please, we have more enemies than that. It was like, what, are gay people losing their sense of humor they have to be perfect now? I'm for gay villains. I think it's healthy to admit there's bad gay movies. Gay's not enough, it's a good start. Question: As gay culture has entered the mainstream has it become more homogeneous?John Waters: I think, yeah. I don't understand what gay people want to be like everybody else. To me, we were outlaws, we used our wit for fighting words, you know, act up, act bad I wanted. But I understand that people... straight, gay, people want to get married, they want to have children. I'm for that, I'm all for that. I'm for like, why would anyone be against gay adoption? I can't understand it, or when celebrities get babies. Madonna's child won the lottery, if you ask me. The one she just got in Africa. I'm for anybody getting any kid, if they can love it. And I'm for abortion. If you can't love your kid, don't have it because it will grow up and kill us.
Recorded September 10, 2010 Interviewed by Max Miller

42:03

John Waters reads from 'Shock Value' (part 1 of 2)

The inimitable John Waters reading from his book 'Shock Value' -- this is the first of two...

John Waters reads from 'Shock Value' (part 1 of 2)

The inimitable John Waters reading from his book 'Shock Value' -- this is the first of two parts.
The below link goes to John Waters' Amazon page:
http://www.amazon.com/John-Waters/e/B000APM1ES/ref=sr_tc_2_0?qid=1402569014&sr=1-2-ent

5:11

Interview with John Waters

Cult film director John Waters discusses his new one-man show The Filthy World.

John Waters: on stage with the ‘Pope of Trash’ (Extended) | BFI

Subscribe: http://bit.ly/subscribetotheBFI.
AuteurJohn Waters joins season curator Justin Johnson to talk about his film career. Moved by the fact that his work attracts younger viewers as his career progresses, Waters pays tribute to like-minded friends he has used as actors and discusses the inspiration behind his vibrant creativity.
More from John Waters & the BFI: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXvkgGofjDzhxPA01PTd8m9Kyv8nmTqOx
Watch more on the BFI Player: http://player.bfi.org.uk/
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21:33

Movies That Shook the World: Pink Flamingos

Part of a nine-part series examining the impact on society of controversial films includes...

Movies That Shook the World: Pink Flamingos

Part of a nine-part series examining the impact on society of controversial films includes remarks by critics, actors, directors, producers and scholars, who comment on the content and context of films.
Pink Flamingos is a 1972American transgressive comedy film directed by John Waters. When the film was initially released, it caused a huge degree of controversy and thus became one of the most notorious cult films ever made. It made an underground star of the flamboyant female impersonator, Divine. The film also stars David Lochary, Mary Vivian Pearce, Mink Stole, Danny Mills, Cookie Mueller, and Edith Massey. Produced on a budget of only $10,000, it was mostly shot on weekends in Phoenix, a suburb of Baltimore, Maryland. After screenings at universities across the U.S. including Harvard College in 1973, the film was picked up by New Line Cinema and became a nationally known film. The creator, cast, crew and commentators discuss the effect the film has had in world culture.

John Waters: on stage with the ‘Pope of Trash’ (Extended) | BFI

Subscribe: http://bit.ly/subscribetotheBFI.
AuteurJohn Waters joins season curator Justin Johnson to talk about his film career. Moved by the fact that his work attracts younger viewers as his career progresses, Waters pays tribute to like-minded friends he has used as actors and discusses the inspiration behind his vibrant creativity.
More from John Waters & the BFI: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXvkgGofjDzhxPA01PTd8m9Kyv8nmTqOx
Watch more on the BFI Player: http://player.bfi.org.uk/
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45:17

John Waters 'Ireland and the End of Debate'

John Waters speaking to the Iona Institute about how the range of acceptable opinion in Ir...

John Waters 'Ireland and the End of Debate'

John Waters speaking to the Iona Institute about how the range of acceptable opinion in Ireland has become narrower and narrower over time, largely thanks to a complicit media that demonizes voices that dissent from the secular liberal consensus.
Good read by John Waters:
http://villagemagazine.ie/index.php/2014/04/john-waters-answers-the-liberal-establishment-and-the-craven-irish-times/#disqus_thread

1:01:05

Grand Torino: Interview with Mr John Waters.

"In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is King"
Find me on:
Gab: YT Grand Torino/ ...

John Waters: What has happened to Ireland?

An Ireland that produced heroes such as Padraig Pearse could now descend into infamy as the first country to ever vote away the right to life. John Waters, author, playwright and former journalist describes the degeneration of a nation.

Divine Trash Documentary 1998

The life and times of Baltimore film maker and midnight movie pioneer, John Waters. Intercut with a 1972 interview of Waters are clips from his first films and recent interviews with his parents, his brother, Divine's mom, actors and crew, other directors, film critics, a film curator, psychologists, and Maryland's last censor, who shudders at the memory of Waters's pictures. Also included is footage of Waters making his early movies, culminating in an up-close and in-depth look at Pink Flamingos: the script, the set, the filming conditions, its editing, its distribution, and its impact. In sweet ways, this documentary is also a celebration of Divine (1945-1988).

30:38

John Waters On "Multiple Maniacs" | BUILD Series

Join the multi-talented John Waters as he discusses his cult-comedy film "Multiple Maniacs...

John Waters On "Multiple Maniacs" | BUILD Series

Join the multi-talented John Waters as he discusses his cult-comedy film "Multiple Maniacs" and its return to theaters. The film follows The Cavalcade of Perversion, a traveling freak-show, which turns out to be a front for a band of psychotic kidnappers and murderers.
For full schedule and more videos go to http://aol.com/build
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SNAPCHAT: @AOLBUILD Interview at AOL HQ in NYC for BUILDSeries. For full schedule and more videos go to http://aol.com/build
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1:30:12

I Am Divine (2013)

I Am Divine is a 2013 American documentary film produced and directed by Jeffrey Schwarz o...

John Waters reads from 'Crackpot' (1 of 2)

Writer, filmmaker, and future presidential candidate (I hope!) John Waters reads from his book 'Crackpot'. This is part one of two parts. John Waters' Amazon.com page can be accessed at the below link:
http://www.amazon.com/John-Waters/e/B000APM1ES/ref=sr_tc_2_0?qid=1392292360&sr=1-2-ent

40:03

John Waters: Men's Voices Ireland Conference 2017

The journalist and author speaks on "The attack on fathers, the attack on family."

John Waters: on stage with the ‘Pope of Trash’ (Extended) | BFI

Subscribe: http://bit.ly/subscribetotheBFI.
AuteurJohn Waters joins season curator Justin Johnson to talk about his film career. Moved by the fact that his work attracts younger viewers as his career progresses, Waters pays tribute to like-minded friends he has used as actors and discusses the inspiration behind his vibrant creativity.
More from John Waters & the BFI: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXvkgGofjDzhxPA01PTd8m9Kyv8nmTqOx
Watch more on the BFI Player: http://player.bfi.org.uk/
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/BFI
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BritishFilmInstitute
Follow us on Google+: https://plus.google.com/+britishfilminstitute/

5:57

What Does It Take To Shock John Waters?

"The election shocked me" says the legendary director and comedian, though he's optimistic...

What Does It Take To Shock John Waters?

"The election shocked me" says the legendary director and comedian, though he's optimistic the country will get through these four years more or less intact.
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Get new episodes of shows you love across devices the next day, stream live TV, and watch full seasons of CBS fan favorites anytime, anywhere with CBS All Access. Try it free! http://bit.ly/1OQA29B
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The Late Show with Stephen Colbert is the premier late night talk show on CBS, airing at 11:35pm EST, streaming online via CBS All Access, and delivered to the International Space Station on a USB drive taped to a weather balloon. Every night, viewers can expect: Comedy, humor, funny moments, witty interviews, celebrities, famous people, movie stars, bits, humorous celebrities doing bits, funny celebs, big group photos of every star from Hollywood, even the reclusive ones, plus also jokes.

John Waters interview (1994)

FilmmakerJohn Waters on "Serial Mom" and other films.
»»﴿───► See more on the Directors Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLIZqvqbtz9I04OH5IZee3L8FHY-Kt3I92
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John Waters: Coming Out Is So Square

http://bigthink.com
John Waters knew he was gay the moment he saw Elvis Presley, but people rarely asked him about his sexuality because they feared it was something "worse" than homosexuality. "They were afraid to hear the answer," he says.
Question: How did you come out?John Waters: Coming out! It's just so square to me. I mean, I always was gay. I knew I was gay the moment I saw Elvis Presley, when I was probably about 10 years old. I thought, what the hell is that? But I know it's important to some people, but I just... no one, I never just came out and made it a ceremony or an announcement. Like when people say, "Are you a bottom or a top?" What is it, a political party? It depends. It's amazing to me the seriousness with these questions we're asked about. To me, most of the gay people I know sort of just always were, but they didn't only hang around with gay people, they hung around with straight people that... I'm for mix. I'm against separatism of any kind. I don't like men that call women fish and I hate that. I hate separate lesbians that hate men. I like them better though. But I know it's important to people. No one ever asked me if I was gay because they thought something was worse than that. They were afraid to hear the answer. I was on the cover of the Advocate and it said, "The World's Most Out Director," but they never asked me if I was gay. They never asked me a gay question. I was waiting. And my father once said, "Do you have to say it in USA Today?" so I didn't. I thought that was fair, you know. He doesn't care if I'm on the cover of Out because his friends don't see that. So I thought it was a funny question. I honored that, sure. USA Today would never ask you that question anyway. So I'm for it, but I kind of just always felt like I always was. I mean, I was on the cover of a gay magazine in like 1972, something called GayTimes and it wasn't because I was brave, just nobody else wanted to put me on the cover. Really. So, and my films have... I've always said that my audiences, even gay people that don't get along with other gay people, black people that don't get along with other black people. Minorities that can't stand even the rules of their own minority. And I'm one of them. Too much gaily correctness makes me crazy too. You now, that GlAAD came out against this tranny movie? Oh please, we have more enemies than that. It was like, what, are gay people losing their sense of humor they have to be perfect now? I'm for gay villains. I think it's healthy to admit there's bad gay movies. Gay's not enough, it's a good start. Question: As gay culture has entered the mainstream has it become more homogeneous?John Waters: I think, yeah. I don't understand what gay people want to be like everybody else. To me, we were outlaws, we used our wit for fighting words, you know, act up, act bad I wanted. But I understand that people... straight, gay, people want to get married, they want to have children. I'm for that, I'm all for that. I'm for like, why would anyone be against gay adoption? I can't understand it, or when celebrities get babies. Madonna's child won the lottery, if you ask me. The one she just got in Africa. I'm for anybody getting any kid, if they can love it. And I'm for abortion. If you can't love your kid, don't have it because it will grow up and kill us.
Recorded September 10, 2010 Interviewed by Max Miller

7:15

John Waters Interview with Prince Paul (Scion AV)

In this exclusive interview, John Waters discuss his signature style & his career successe...

John Waters Interview: Hitchhiking Across the U.S. | The New York Times

The film director and author hitchhiked across the United States and lived to tell the tale.
Produced by: Jeremy Beiler
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John WatersInterview: Hitchhiking Across the U.S. | The New York Times
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John Waters: Behind the Pencil Moustache

Go inside the home and mind of John Waters as we take a closer look inside his Baltimore home before we kick off a week of his controversial films in JOHNWATERS PRESENTS: FILMS OF BAD TASTE on Monday August 11 at 9.30pm.